“If
I should become a stranger, you know that would make me more than sad.”
Dougie
MacLean, Scottish singer-songwriter, composer,
multi-instrumentalist and record producer
As I said in t’other
blog (you can tell I’ve visited Yorkshire recently, where “tha noz tha's nowt so-queer as folk”, but maybe more
about them another time when “our lass” isn’t watching!!), it’s been a while
since anything has appeared here, and as it says in the title, part of the
chorus of a wonderful song called Caledonia (about returning to Scotland), I’d
hate to become a stranger!
So, for my return, in the words of “our lass,” her indoors or the trouble
and strife; a little idle rambling or complete madness, albeit somewhat
multilingual which I hope impresses you after my absence?!
What do they
have in common?
We have started to recently visit a French friend to help us brush us our
French; vocab, pronunciation, gender alignment (as regards le and la and un and
une!) and the all important accents!!
Imagine my surprise then, when doing an exercise about music, musicians
and musical instruments, when an everyday household, indeed kitchen object
mysteriously thrust its way into the proceedings!
Suffice to say what do; Ringo Starr (The Beatles drummer for the
youngsters amongst you!), Harry Potter who probably needs no introduction at
all, regardless of age, due to “clever” advertising, Sir Simon Rattle (a famous
conductor) and a hungry Frenchman all have in common?
Baffled as I was, it being the conductor in the exercise mentioned above?
Well, they are all in need of a baguette, in Ringo’s case a drumstick,
Harry’s a wand, Simon’s a baton and the hungry Frenchman a loaf of bread. Interestingly, when looking into this further
in a weighty but somewhat old French dictionary, the loaf doesn’t get a
mention, but several other meanings are listed:
a switch as previously used by a schoolteacher on errant pupils, a rod
such as that used by Black Rod in the House of Commons, an usher in a church or
indeed a water diviner, a ramrod for your blunderbuss (I did say it was an old
dictionary!), the stick attached to a rocket, a glove stretcher and (answers on
a postcard please, as this one leaves me lost for an explanation!), a clock (of
stockings)!
It really isn’t surprising that we still feel that we, passer par les baguettes each time we
leave the house and have to converse in French, and before you ask it’s not
what we say as we near the boulangerie when we’re feeling a little peckish, it
means to run the gauntlet! I’m tempted
to say it’s a fluke if you get it right:
Incidentally, Fluke can mean:
- A fish, and a flatworm.
- The end parts of an anchor.
- The fins on a whale's tail.
- A stroke of luck!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Some more of life’s little mysteries!
·
Why do “Indestructible Socks” only come with a
twelve month guarantee!
·
Why are “Stoned Prunes” not guaranteed, they always
work for me!!
·
Why in all the years of taking children away on
school trips did I never have one be sick on the coach, if when they started to
feel queasy, I sat them on a folded Daily Telegraph!!! I have my own thoughts, but I’ll leave you to
think up your own, again answers on a postcard please.
On this last point I’m reminded of two things;
Spike Milligan’s cure for seasickness – sit under a tree!! And, a recent article in the Kate’s Farm
series in the Telegraph Magazine (I must point out here I don’t actually take
The Telegraph, but “read” it when visiting someone close to me – I tried to
explain, but they’re not for turning!!), talks about how she can merge two
colonies or bees after one has lost its queen.
On the advice of their bee expert they put a sheet of The Daily
Telegraph “on top of the brood box of the hive with the queen, poked a few holes
in the paper and put the other hive on top of it.! Apparently, “Each colony has its own distinct
odour, and bees will fight with those from outside their own colony. But by the time the bees have chewed through
the newspaper, the odours of both colonies have combined and they believe they
are one happy family.”
A week later it had worked, the paper was
shredded and the bees happy with the stronger colony having a better chance of
surviving the winter. The article
attributes the success to their bee expert and a copy of “everyone’s favourite
broadsheet,” their words not mind! Mine
are more along the lines of the odour of said daily newspaper, or should that
be stench! Add your “answers” to the postcards mentioned above!!
Did you know?
Kit Kat is one of Nestle’s, and Rowntree’s of
York before that, top selling brands, with 150 consumed worldwide every
second!!!
And, the fact I’ve recently been in York is a
pure coincidence! This came from an
article where certain types of Kit Kat have been recalled as there is a risk
they might contain pieces of plastic, and there’s me thinking that a Kit Kat is
one of very few everyday necessities that hasn’t been plasticised (e.g. car
headlights, kitchen chopping boards, noodles as in Pot Noodles – I’m sure you
get my drift!), although I’m sure they are smaller than when I used to buy them
as a child!!
And finally!
After our long journey back from the UK after our
stint in the Pet Shop (watch this space!), my profound thought of
the moment!
“The hill is steep but the summit is near”
as I climbed our steep staircase and sunk
thankfully into my own bed, there’s nothing like it!
*********************************
So, there you are, just a little something to make contact and reassure
those of you that have missed me, that I’m still here and functioning
“normally” or should that be just as mad as ever!!
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